Gela

Gela
He leads me beside still waters

Wednesday, 18 May 2011

Pastoral Care

By David Pettett.

The concept of Pastoral Care springs from the understanding of the compassion of Christ. In Matthew 9:36 Jesus had compassion on the crowds because they were like sheep without a shepherd.
It is into this sense of “lostness” that the pastoral carer comes. Typically the place of lostness is a “hard place”, a place that is out of the ordinary for the person who has a sense of loss. It is a physical place such as a hospital, a jail, a nursing home. But it is also not a physical place but a place of mourning, grief, sadness or paradoxically, a place of happiness.
Jesus also expresses compassion when he sees suffering, for example when he heals the sick (Matthew 14:14), or comforts the bereaved (Luke 7:13).
The unique encounter that Jesus brings is one of restoration and reconciliation with God. He does not “cure” disease as a doctor or nurse might bring medical attention, but he heals. (The Greek word of the New Testament for “heal” is the same word for “save”.)
The unique encounter that the Christian Pastoral Carer brings to a person in a hard place is this same restoration and reconciliation. The Pastoral Carer therefore does not mix the roles of medical attention or other allied health roles with that of Pastoral Care. Pastoral Care compliments these other types of caring by adding the dimension of reconciliation with God.
Pastoral Carers need specific training so that these boundaries are clear and so that the Carer remains anchored in his or her own confidence in God while at the same time being able to sit with a person in a hard place that may be a place of great turmoil and anguish. Then, while being anchored with God in Christ and at the same time being with another in their place of turmoil, the Carer can, by the power of the Holy Spirit, help the person in turmoil to discover how Christ Himself is present in their suffering.

Monday, 9 May 2011

What does an Evangelical Theology of Chaplaincy Look Like?

Kate Bradford
An evangelical theology of Chaplaincy draws on both evangelical tradition and historical roots of chaplaincy. Theologically it must engage both with theologies from above and those from below. The theology must avoid reductionism but rather be open to contributions from other disciplines and allow them to both critique and contribute to theological positions held.
Chaplaincy is not parish based but institution based. The chaplaincy pastoral encounter does not always have faith or a church property providing common ground, but rather an institution (work place, hospital, armed forces, prison or school) or incidents (such as trauma, suffering, illness, and tragedy) provide the point of connection. Christian chaplaincy is not simply parish pastoral care ‘tweaked’.  The rules of engagement for a chaplaincy ministry are fundamentally different from parish based ministry, although, both parish and chaplaincy ministries engage in ‘cure’ of souls.
An evangelical theology of chaplaincy will:
·         Draw on the evangelical touchstones of Conversionism, Activism, Biblicism, and Crucicentricism.[i]
·         Engage with the historic traditions of Chaplaincy and Pastoral Care.
·         Draw on the reformed theologies of Calvin, Luther and Augustine that look at the world from above.
·         Draw on the Theological Anthropologies that consider faith from below: the perspective of humanity, and engage with the God/man Jesus Christ.
·         Draw on the theologies that engage with the narrative and drama of Scripture and philosophical concepts. 
·         Not lose focus that the primary concerns of Chaplaincy are: the pastoral encounter, the patient as person and the pastor as person. Attention must be paid to all three aspects. The discipline always has at its end, a practical purpose, a real visit. Clinical Pastoral Education is an action/reflection training module that aims to hone and sharpen skills in this area. 
·         Determine the theological frame that the chaplain brings into the encounter, if affects who the chaplain ‘is’ in the encounter, how they interpret the situation and the care plan that is formulated for the way forward.
·         Understand that contemporary terms Chaplaincy and Pastoral Care describe a broad discipline: one far wider than the traditional Christian meanings. This discipline is also called spiritual care and concerns itself primarily with issues of belief and meaning. This public meaning arises from  secular concepts that encompasses religion, ecumenicalism, multi-faith dialogue and psychology, sociology and spirituality. 
·         Enter a dialogue with the pastoral and practical theologians who are actively engaging with the broad definition of spiritual care and engaging with disciplines of psychology and sociology and issues of the infinite, ultimate concerns, suffering, pain, joy, peace, compassion and the limits of human finitude.
Three evangelical theologians who are writing in this area are Timothy Keller a former Professor of Practical Theology at Westminster, Eugene Peterson, Professor of Spiritual Theology at Regent College and Andrew Purves, Professor of Reformed Theology at Pittsburgh Theological Seminary.
Theology of Chaplaincy is not a purely theoretical discipline. It does involve theory, but it is more like an apprenticeship. It involves a repeated, spiralling process of theological stretching. There are times without answers, other times of deconstruction and disengagement before a deeper theological reconstruction as we understand something new of Christ, or ourselves, or another: then there is a further re-engagement. All this is learned.  As the chaplain lowers themselves down into the abyss of another’s suffering, the chaplain themselves enters the sufferer’s suffering. Issues that surround human life emerge: pain, suffering, justice, the groaning creation, a fallen broken world, alienation and forsakenness. These can also exist alongside compassion, kindness, image of God, love, light, burden bearing, redemption, forgiveness, peace, joy and eternity. The issues all cut across our common humanity, frailty and flawed morality.
As a chaplain, we see into the brokenness of another’s world we too are confronted with our own brokenness. We understand again our own need of Jesus’ death for us on the cross. We do nothing in our own strength: we are not counsellors, or social workers but simply fellow travellers who have been shown mercy in Christ and, as such, we extend mercy to another. An evangelical chaplain will be concerned that the  ultimate need of any person is to see their story completed in Christ, and as such along with listening, silence, compassion and care will seek to share, at just the right time, saving words of Truth that illuminate true life.




[i] D W Bebbington. Evangelical Christianity and the Enlightenment. Crux: December 1989/ Vol. XXV. No. 4. pp. 29-36. As quoted by D. Pettett in previous blog, 10 April, 2011